8 Mo. App. 131 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1879
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is a demand for rent of premises situated in Illinois, which the plaintiff leased in June, 1872, to L. D. Cabanné for ten years, at a rent of $100 per year. The lease was drawn but not subscribed by Cabanné, who, however, had it recorded, took possession of the premises, and paid rent for two years. He died in April, 1875, and in November, 1875, his executrix paid another year’s rent, that had accrued in his lifetime, and gave notice to the plaintiff that the estate did not wish to occupy the premises, and would pay rent no longer. The court below found for the plaintiff in the sum of $324 rent then due, and interest, and $400 future rent, payable in instalments based on the terms of the lease.
There is no covenant to pay rent in the lease, nor is it a sealed instrument; hence the defendant contends that
The lease was fully executed, and Vallé v. Kramer, 4 Mo. App. 570, is not in point. Cabanne wrote the lease, and wrote his name in it as one of the parties, and did not sign it, as one of the witnesses testified, because he (Cabanné) said he did not consider it necessary for him to sign it. After the plaintiff and his wife affixed their marks, and the lease had been witnessed, Cannó took it, put it upon record, entered, and during his life occupied the premises. Thus the intent to finally execute was showu, and this intent was regarded as fully accomplished by the parties. It is accordingly sufficient, so far as the Statute of Frauds is concerned, that the lessee’s name, written by himself, appears in the first clause containing the usual description of the parties, in the third person. Such is the law of Illinois, where the contract was made, and the law as generally recognized. McConnell v. Brillhart, 17 Ill. 354; Evans v. Ashley, 8 Mo. 181; Catlett v. Catlett, 55 Mo. 330; Barry v. Coombe, 1 Pet. 650; Penniman v. Hartshorn, 13 Mass. 87 ; Saunderson v. Jackson, 3 Esp. 181; Bluck v. Gompertz, 7 Exch. 862.
That there are general assets of the estate also destroys the force of another objection made by the • defendant, namely, that the action, being for rent of land lying in another State, which has become due since the death of the lessee, does not lie against an executrix appointed by a court of this State. The executrix here attempted to waive the term, so as not to be liable upon the promise of her testator to pay the annual rent; but this is what the law does not permit her to do, so long as she has assets.
A portion of the demand was here not due; but under the provisions of our administration law, judgment may be rendered, as it was in this case, though the demand is not due at the time of the trial. Wag. Stats. 104, sect. 22. The judgment clearly distinguishes between the amounts presently and prospectively payable.
The judgment is affirmed.